B.G.'s Woodland Mall in foreclosure

BOWLING GREEN - A Washington bank has filed an $11 million foreclosure action against the owner of Bowling Green's only indoor shopping center, alleging that the mortgage hasn't been paid since February.

Woodland Mall Holdings LLC, owner of the struggling Woodland Mall on North Main Street in Bowling Green, is named in the foreclosure action filed last week by U.S. Bank NA.

The suit, filed in Wood County Common Pleas Court, alleges that the $8.9 million mortgage taken out in February, 2007 to purchase the 40-acre mall is in default, and seeks appointment of a receiver to collect rents and manage the business until the case is resolved. It asks for more than $2 million in penalties and interest.

The case asks that the mall be sold to another owner. Nothing in the filing indicates that the mall will close.

Artek Realty, of New York City, and Kotel Management, of Wood Ridge, N.J., bought the mall in November, 2005 for an undisclosed amount from investors Ramy Eidi, Chuck Sallah, and Jim Sallah. At the time of the sale, the 272,000-square-foot mall's current owners owned or managed more than 3 million square feet of shopping centers and related properties in Ohio and other states.

They are the fifth owners of the 22-year-old mall, which has anchors of Elder-Beerman and Dunham's Sports.

News of the foreclosure action surprised the remaining tenants of the mall, who complained about the lack of business traffic. One of the mall's former anchors, Steve & Barry's University Sportswear declared bankruptcy and liquidated its holdings in 2008.

"I'm barely making it here because of the traffic," said Lori Hanway, owner of A Taste of Amish Deli, a 755-square-foot storefront near Elder-Beerman that has been open for three years. She said she's worked at Woodland Mall on and off for more than 20 years, including as the owner of her own business since 2006. The loss of Steve & Barry's and the poor economy have exacted a terrible toll on the mall, she said.

"To be honest, I was hoping it would go under so I could get out of here," she said. "My lunch [sales] have been $100 lunches, and you can't live on $100 lunches."

Several years ago, the mall's previous owners attempted to fill their vacant storefronts with "non-traditional" tenants and landed the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services and Broken Chain church, among other tenants. This year, the owners asked Wood County officials whether any public agencies needed space, county officials said.

"Considering the economy, I'm very thankful that we're doing as well as we are," said Jana Scheer, owner of Virtual PCs, which sells custom-built computers and components.